Battery check

Nov 16, 2015
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Pottering about in the garage today, and I decided to check the battery voltage on my spare caravan battery.
Using a multi meter. 13.9 volts, strange thought I.checked my motorcycle battery, 13.6 volts. , This is weird.

Back to basics, take the battery out of the multi meter and fit a new battery, measured the old PP3 battery, and it was reading, 5.3 volts, instead of 9 volts ISH.
Rechecked spare caravan battery, 12.6 volts, Motorcycle battery 12.7 volts.
My spare multi meter is in the caravan. If I had it at home I could have cross checked the multi meters.

Just something to think about.
 
Mar 14, 2005
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Pottering about in the garage today, and I decided to check the battery voltage on my spare caravan battery.
Using a multi meter. 13.9 volts, strange thought I.checked my motorcycle battery, 13.6 volts. , This is weird.

Back to basics, take the battery out of the multi meter and fit a new battery, measured the old PP3 battery, and it was reading, 5.3 volts, instead of 9 volts ISH.
Rechecked spare caravan battery, 12.6 volts, Motorcycle battery 12.7 volts.
My spare multi meter is in the caravan. If I had it at home I could have cross checked the multi meters.

Just something to think about.
That is a sign of a poorly designed multimeter. I'll bet it wasn't a Fluke , or if it was it was faulty.
 
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Nov 16, 2015
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It was a Gunsons, pocket meter 2, 4142.
No battery check position, I cannot afford a Fluke meter and unfortunately I didn't condemn one from work before I retired. 🥴but being an retired engineer I should replace the batteries every 6 months , or so.
 
Jul 18, 2017
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Throughout my working life I used a Fluke meter for many years and found it to be very accurate. The one time when it did give up the ghost for whatever reason, they replaced the innards FOC although it was probably 3 - 4 years old.
 

Mel

Moderator
Mar 17, 2007
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Hang on, so a Fluke is a brand of multimeter? Not as in “chance occurrence”?
Mel
Confused and Bewildered
 
Mar 14, 2005
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I'm sorry Mel, I never thought about it. To me and most professionals working with electrics/electronics the name Fluke is synonymous with high quality and reliable electrical measurement technology equipment, I could have used Avo, Megger, Gossen, Philips, Agilent/keysight/HP, who's equipment I have and use, but rather like people will often refer to a vacuum cleaner as a Hoover or these days a Dyson, and in caravanning terms, again less so as times go by, a space heater as a "Carver"
 
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Apr 30, 2025
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Pottering about in the garage today, and I decided to check the battery voltage on my spare caravan battery.
Using a multi meter. 13.9 volts, strange thought I.checked my motorcycle battery, 13.6 volts. , This is weird.

Back to basics, take the battery out of the multi meter and fit a new battery, measured the old PP3 battery, and it was reading, 5.3 volts, instead of 9 volts ISH.
Rechecked spare caravan battery, 12.6 volts, Motorcycle battery 12.7 volts.
My spare multi meter is in the caravan. If I had it at home I could have cross checked the multi meters.

Just something to think about.
While on charge, bike and car batteries show an accurate 13.6v to 14.1. This will be the same after a run in the car of bike and should only drop a bit if the battery is healthy. This is off load voltage. Check again with the lights on if you can without the engine running, if it drops too much there is a chance the battery is slowly failing. Always worth verifying the measuring instrument first.
 

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